That would produce a div or table which had a dotted top border, a solid righthand border, a dashed bottom border, and a double left border. The top is 1px high, the right is 2 pixels wide, the bottom is 1px tall, the left is 5px wide. The top is lightgrey, the right and bottom are a darker grey, and the left is lightgrey again. You can insert tons of different options. If you ever need to change any of them just change the css. No matter what your css coding is your div will always be:

Re: Dashed Border

Posted 21 September 2002 - 09:56 PM

uh huh. Windows has a screwy way of interpreting "dotted." It displays dotted as dashed and dashed as dashed. Stupid MS. Like I've said before. If it is a commercial project I urge everyone to use tables using CSS only for font stuff since NS4 supports all of the important CSS font stuff pretty completely. If it's for your own personal site, go cutting edge and screw older browsers!

Re: Dashed Border

Posted 22 September 2002 - 08:16 AM

Quik, on Sep 21 2002, 11:38 PM, said:

Yet one of the most popular hosting services uses tables- why?

either they like doing things the hard way or they just haven't caught up with the times. I can't imagine going to all the work to do that with tables, when it's sooooo simple and flexible with css. :)

(nevertheless, I'm personally avoiding the trend of putting dots around everything just because we can...lol)